Mandrake IPO Successful 46
Subscribers to Mandrake's weekly newsletter got the news earlier today that "MandrakeSoft is pleased to announce that the company is now listed on the Euronext Marché Libre. As a result of the successful Initial Public Offering, a total of 688.480 shares were sold at 6.2 Euros each. This results in an increase in capital of approximately 4.3 million Euros and represents 20.28% of the company's capital after issue." A good portion of the offering was completed in just the last half-day of availability, according to email received from Mandrake higher-ups, in part perhaps because of the confusion about who could participate in the offer, and how. There's also a story about the IPO at NewsForge, and a discussion at Mandrake's forum. If you're interested in picking up any stock in the company, there are some useful pointers (and more info) at their investor info page.
Re:This is good news (Score:2)
At least Mandrake tried. (Score:2)
Now Linux companies are consolidating, overhauling their business plans, laying off staff, scaling back expansion plans and pushing back profitability schedules. "It would seem there are too many distributions for the market to bear," said Gartner analyst Tom Henkel. (http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,26
Red Hat, Inc., the leader in developing deploying and managing open source linux solutions, announced on a reported basis, a net loss of $24.2 million. (http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2001-
Turbolinux, based in Brisbane, Calif., a Linux-based software provider has withdrawn a $60 million initial public offering "in light of current market conditions." (http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/010320/n20215287_2.html) (http://cnnfn.cnn.com/2001/03/20/deals/ipo/)
Clayton-based Linuxgruven.com, a Linux training and service company with 106 employees, laid off 100 employees (http://stlouis.bcentral.com/stlouis/stories/2001
Lineo withdrew its initial public offering in January. Caldera Systems delayed the acquisition of Santa Cruz Operations' Unix software by a quarter. Linuxcare laid off dozens in February, with Linuxcare co-founders Dave Sifry and Dave LaDuke are among those departing. VA Linux Systems cut 114 people in February and delayed its expected profitability by nine months. (http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,26
Due to the troubles of Corel, abysmal sales and so on, Corel Linux is going out of business and was nearly taken over by Microsoft who sell another troubled OS. Owing to the GPL, SuSE is laying off almost all of its US staff. Major marketing surveys show that Linux has steadily declined in market share. Even LinuxWorld.com shut down "because of the economy and everything else" (http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=01/03/13
Re:Umm -- a little confusing.... (Score:2)
First thing I said to myself was "that should be 640,480". I'm such a nerd...
Re:Reverse splits are commonplace in the new econo (Score:1)
I think this could be good or bad (Score:2)
Lee
I think you're right about some things (Score:2)
A one point a lot of people of questionable intelligence and even more questionable awareness saw Linux as the next big thing. So they invested a boatload of money into companies without understanding that these companies were trying to make money off something that was not an economic good in the strictest sense.
While it may be possible to make some money off open source, I seriously doubt that more than a handful of people are going to make a lot of money off it. When this fact has been raised, the open source/free software community has generally responded very poorly. Rather than acknowledging this fact we have instead spent our efforts trying to pander to potential investors and generally fool everyone, especially ourselves, into thinking that open source companies can make a lot of money.
It is true that Redhat is in the black now, at least on paper. But imagine if Linux were a traditional product and that it enjoyed the level of popularity that it does right now, Redhat would be like Apple was in the late 70's, a fairy tale success story. There is a question of course of whether Linux would be this popular if it were a commercial product created and marketed by one company, but my example was a hypothetical one.
The truth is that open source companies would fare better in the long run as non profit enterprises. Non profit companies exist to provide a valuable service to the community rather than to make money. Whatever income they receive goes to things like bills, staff salaries, etc. There aren't any investors wailing for profits.
So now tell me, what model does open source fit into better: making money, or providing a service to the community?
Lee
Re:Valuation of Linux distros? (Score:1)
--
Hypocrites, or a nice OS comparison?? (Score:1)
That is all you should need to know about web server choice.
Frog51
Re:Great news (Score:1)
I know I'll get flamed for this post, but Im not intrested in -buying- my Linux dist, just because they got an IPO..
Support on the other hand, thats another thing..
Congrats! (Score:1)
In other news, this story [kuro5hin.org] will make your asshole pucker!
Dive Gear [divingdeals.com]
Re:Valuation of Linux distros? (Score:1)
On the other hand, it might be possible that Mandrake is just as hard to post-install twiddle, but I've have never had to do it. Mandrake is always usable, having drivers or modules for all hardware, after the install. I just start using it.
This difference goes back at least to the RH6.2/Mandrake7.0 days (just a few months ago). For example, at that time RedHat wouldn't run out of the box on athlons, unless you knew enough to type in a special kernel option to LILO. Then you had to go and edit lilo.conf and rerun lilo, or recompile the kernel so it didn't need that option. Mandrake spun up right off the bat.
I think that one of the best hopes for either RedHat or Mandrake is to be paid fees by an OEM to make sure the distribution works on all of their machines with minimal user expertise. Aside from the fact that no OEMs are currently making enough money to really pay either RedHat or Mandrake a lot, if I where looking for a company to do that I would choose Mandrake. Why start from second-best to get better, when you can pay the best to get better ?
Re:This is good news (Score:1)
At the top of the boom, he buys a "real" company with his stock (inflated, like everyone elses) I might disagree w/his choice of company, but as you say, buying real assets with inflated paper, can't be beat.
Re:This is good news (Score:2)
A real company would have been issuing press releases left, right, and centre suggesting that current valuations were unwarranted. I mean they tell you they're undervalued when the stock is down, why not the reverse? But alas, we're a greedy species.
Case in point, I once invested in a firm that got into trouble and eventually declared bankruptcy. In the preceding chaos, the stock had several rallies and the CEO calmly informed shareholders and shareholders to be that while they were doing the best they could to preserve the shareholders position, it was likely that 100% of the company would end up with it's creditors, with nothing left for shareholders. When asked why he thought the stock was rallying he replied, "Wallpaper! Maybe they need cheap wallpaper!"
Re:Valuation of Linux distros? (Score:3)
a) maintain an exchange listing requirement that the shares trade above some price, i.e. $1
b) pander to joe-six pack investors who equate big prices to stabilty & respectibility
Splits are only done for joe-six packs also, but for a different reason - they don't have enough money to buy a board lot (100 shares) at $100+/share, so most companies try to do splits to keep their share price between $10 & $100.
It's the valuation that matters - you can have 1 billion shares trading at one penny each or 1 million shares trading at $1 - makes no financial difference whatsoever, only a pyschological difference in the minds of some investors. (which of course, will manifest itself in a real financial difference for the company's stock performance if people buy or sell based on that pyschology, which they do.)
Of course, if a company has to worry about a) or b) above, there's probably a reason for it, a reason you should know before you invest.
Re:Great news (Score:2)
If the Linux users aren't controlling the market, then maybe they're not 3L337 enough...
Reverse splits are commonplace in the new economy (Score:5)
--
$15 million overvalued? (Score:2)
The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.
IPO? (Score:2)
Incidental Programming Outage.
All I know is, my portfolio is singing some crazy tunes ;)
Now that the bubble has burst (Score:1)
On the other hand, those of us who bought before last January still have a positive numbered return from our portfolio.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page [cavalrypilot.com]
Re:that's like $250 (Score:2)
Hopefully, you're not stupid and you realize that in Europe, they use the period instead of a comma to separate monetary amounts.
Re:Umm -- a little confusing.... (Score:1)
Kjella
Re:that's like $250 (Score:1)
Not really since foreign markets are not affected by what is happening in the U.S. markets except now, and any IPO isn't a waste of time. It's just to time to gain capital. Plus since Mandrake is the only linux company listed on the market in Europe, I think, they stand a better chance to do better as long as there earnings are on track..and other things.
Re:Umm -- a little confusing.... (Score:1)
Re:This is good news (Score:1)
Or, as some of the smarter companies did, use their paper value to buy up companies with tangible assets (using shares, *not* cash like stupider companies did), so they ended up with some solid value after the crash. In other words, exploit the situation with an eye on the long term.
Re:Valuation of Linux distros? (Score:1)
Have a look to PC DATA (US retail market) and have a look to Google with the keywords: "caldera mandrake suse redhat poll". And you'll see that all the polls show Mandrake to be one of the most used distro:u se+redhat+poll&btnG=Google+Search [google.com]
http://www.google.com/search?q=caldera+mandrake+s
Re:for those who want to have a look at share pric (Score:1)
Not a flame (Score:2)
This is just fucking insane... (Score:1)
What the hell is Slashdot coming to?
seems rather small (Score:2)
And here we have an IPO for under 5 million Euros. That's not even in the ballpark for what a software company would have IPO'd for ten years ago.
It's pretty good for a company that has always lost money, I suppose, but it doesn't exactly hold out the prospect of a brilliant future.
Tim
Re:Reverse splits are commonplace in the new econo (Score:1)
Great news (Score:4)
It's good to remember investors, not Linux users, control the market (and thus fate of companies). So go out there and support your software -- buy it!
for those who want to have a look at share price (Score:3)
it's in French, but everyone should understand easily. last share value is right to "Dernier:".
Other Links (Score:5)
Here's [mandrakesoft.com] a PDF describing the market.
Here [mandrakesoft.com] is Mandrakes information page on the IPO.
Finally, this [mandrakeforum.com] a price-per-share page.
Re:Hypocrites, or a nice OS comparison?? (Score:1)
Apparently, if jobs.osdn.com is running MS, then uptimes is NOT the only thing you need to know. And (correct me if I'm wrong, I most likely am), it looks like this site hasn't been around for long enough to have a long uptime.
And the reboots could be for patching the OS against 'Code Red'.
Well, still...
Mandrake : bought by Linux Users (Score:1)
Re:-1 Asshole (Score:5)
The fact that the Linux community doesn't want to hear others' opinions is completely apparent. Maybe he didn't make the greatest support for his statements (I think many of us could make many more to back up what he stated), but he is heading in the right direction. Programmers need to live and raise families... something they can not do producing free software 24x7. They need income to survive and they won't get income by being open source developers.
The whole "bond" thing mentioned the other day on
A lot of companies are doing the "service & support" thing like Mandrakesoft, but I honestly fee that the numerous newsgroups, IRC channels, and web pages can provide much better support for any Linux distro and/or opensourced project than any company can. By sheer numbers, we can see that Mandrakesoft (nor RedHat; nor Caldera) can hire 1 million people to do service & support while newsgroups and the such offer such a wide range of experience and aptitude.
As for survivability, Linux will survive, maybe more so for hobbyists and those who like the alternative. Linux won't be able to make money directly to those who build companies around it or Open Sourced software (well, maybe a few but I don't see a trend). The money will come into those individual programmers who spend their days working for an IT shop (or going to school) and their nights coding their window manager; using this project to get them experience which means better jobs. A person who developes open sourced software is looking at expanding his/her own horizons and by getting jobs for software companies that sell software, (s)he will be able to make the money (s)he needs to live, raise their family, and provide a better coder so future versions of windows DON'T SUCK.
I think you need to flash your brain's firmware.
Umm -- a little confusing.... (Score:4)
For those of you that multipled the numbers together and were confused as to how they came up with 4.3 million, it should either read 688,480 shares sold at 6.2 Euros each or 688.480 shares sold at 6,2 Euros each, depending on what country you're from. I hope this is helpful -- I'm not trying to be critical.
GreyPoopon
--
Re:Hypocrites, or a nice OS comparison?? (Score:1)
I have a computer at work running Windows 3.1 and it's only been rebooted twice in the last 4 years and both of those were the result of power failures. Does that mean that Windows 3.1 is a desirable OS?
I don't think so.
Re:Congrats! (Score:1)
The real question.....now that they have pocketed a few million Euros.......is what are they going to do with that money?
All Linux distros have been handed a golden opportunity by Microsuck. Between the load of crap called Windows XP, Microsuck's arrogance and the Gestapo tactics of the BSA, now is the perfect time for somebody to do some serious marketing of Linux.
Or they could just be like all the other Internet companies and spend the money on Aeron chairs and foosball tables.
Re:The manditory... (Score:1)
I don't have to imagine don't you remember last year?
Re:4.3 mil. Euros, what is that 3 million dollars (Score:1)
----
Re:4.3 mil. Euros, what is that 3 million dollars (Score:1)
----
Re:4.3 mil. Euros, what is that 3 million dollars (Score:1)
----
Re:that's like $250 (Score:1)
Re:Valuation of Linux distros? (Score:2)
Valuation of Linux distros? (Score:5)